DDHv wrote:IMO, information is organized data to 1)communicate, 2)cause the execution of an action, or 3)establish a structure.
Your definition of what information is and does is quite different from what is generally used, or how the term is defined in philosophy.
Irreducible complications exist that cannot be reached by any known series of small steps. An amateur can observe the lack of observations and refuse to accept what is currently a purely speculative theory.
Thereby showing that said Amateur is an amateur, with an insufficient understanding of the concepts he is finding to be lacking.
Which observations, and which reports? If researchers ignore things that anyone can see, why should we assume they are not choosing to ignore something else?
Name a thing "that anyone can see" that researchers have ignored. Come on, you can do it.
Can you source that story? Can you find proof that the author of that paper interpreted his observations correctly? Do you have the training and expertise required to accurately say whether or not it is correct?
And, can you for the love of kittens please stop linking articles written for a site as biased as this constitution.com site seems to be?
His boss didn't examine the evidence, but fired him instead.
Did he? Do you have the transcripts from the lawsuit in hand? Or are you just blindly trusting this one site you apparently seem to read religiously?
Have you even investigated this? Or are you assuming you already know the answer?
I have some issues with the methodology, to say the least. As I said, it's a personal, subjective account of Mueller's experiences. Mueller, like all of us, is prone to cognitive biases; as far as I'm concerned, his prayer journal is, in parts, a giant testament to confirmation bias. While it can be used as a starting point for scientific inquiry, it cannot offer a final answer.
In the historical sense, can you point to any contemporary report of any falsity in his reports?
Can you point to corroborating accounts?
Based on, or using the language of? Like Mark Armitrage, ref above? Copernicus was smart enough to arrange publication after his death. I will be looking at Andrew Snelling, Phd's mineralogicao publications.
So you're saying the research he produced that falls in line with the standard theories are all lies, then?
Oh, and while you're looking at Snelling's publication record, do keep in mind that he is or was Editor in Chief of a "scientific journal" published by the Answers in Genesis crowd, which not only professes to have a viewpoint (which should be an obvious no-go for a proper scientific journal), but that 'We start with the Bible as being true. And many other journals do not. They are going to start with human reasoning as the basis for truth.'
Just keep that in mind for when you want to quote him again, given your professed "observations are paramount" stance.
Are major investments needed to see logic errors, assumptions, or lack of observations in the published reports?
Major investments of time on your part in terms of following the research at the very least.
An amateur may not be able to understand some things, but why can't he report truly on those thing he does understand and see?
Because the things said Amateur doesn't see and doesn't understand (which an expert would be able to) are also important.
Error can come from bad assumptions, bad logic, or false observations.
Which laypeople are bound to make.
Why bound? Have we become blind to the physical world?
This entire thread is based on you and a few other people making bad assumptions, bad observations, and following it up with bad logic.
For a partial list of some professionals re the ID theory, read: https://dennisdjones.wordpress.com/2011 ... id-theory/
If the first entry on your list of "Scientists who embrace ID" is Dan Brown, you're already off on the wrong path.
If you then continue on to list Neil deGrasse Tyson as an ID supporter because he once said in a lecture that ID should be taught as an example of logically fallacious thinking, you've lost all credibility.
There is a more comprehensive list to be found here, which also does a nice job of categorizing the people on it in terms of whether or not they actually are working in evolutionary biology (i.e. are at least in theory competent to evaluate evolutionary findings on their merits, as opposed to being like you and arguing from a position of sometimes profound ignorance). One important thing to point out in this regard is that the article linked above shows that support for ID amongst people who actually work in the relevant fields is minuscule; One would think that if it had scientific merit, this theory would have a few more supporters (And before you even start with the conspiracy theory nonsense: Just look at how the physics community is divided into groups arguing for and against string theory and its descendants).